Krishna Menon
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Date of Birth |
: |
May 3, 1897 |
Date of Death |
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Oct 6, 1974 |
Place of Birth |
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Kerala |

Vengalil Krishnan (V.K.) Krishna Menon was an Indian nationalist and
politician. Menon was born at Panniyankara in Calicut, Kerala, into the
powerful Vengalil family of South India. He was the grandson of the Raja
of Kartanad and the first son of a successful lawyer of the Calicut
bar, Komath Krishna Kurup, one of Kerala's richest men at the time.
Menon had his early education in Tellicherry and he took his B.A. degree
from Presidency College, Chennai. While in college, he started taking
an active interest in the national movement. While studying in the Law
College of Madras, he became involved in Theosophy and actively
associated with Annie Besant and the Home Rule Movement. He was a
leading member of the 'Brothers of Service', founded by Annie Besant who
spotted his gifts and helped him travel to England in 1924. In London,
Menon pursued further education at the London School of Economics and
University College London, and at the same time he became a passionate
proponent of India's freedom. In England, he worked hard for Indian
independence as a journalist and secretary (1929 - 1947) of the India
League, and became associated with fellow Indian nationalist leader
Jawaharlal Nehru. In 1934 he was admitted to the English bar, and after
joining the Labour Party he was elected borough councillor of St.
Pancras, London. St. Pancras later conferred on him the Freedom of the
Borough, the only other person so honoured being Bernard Shaw. In 1932
he inspired a fact-finding delegation headed by Labour MP Ellen
Wilkinson to visit India. Menon served as its Secretary and edited its
report entitled 'conditions in India'. During the thirties he founded
with Allen Lane the Penguin and Pelican paper back books. He worked as
an editor for Bodley Head, Penguin and Pelican Books, and the Twentieth
Century Library. After India was granted independence in 1947, Menon was
appointed high commissioner to the United Kingdom, a post in which he
remained until 1952. Subsequently, he led the Indian delegation to the
United Nations (1952 - 1962), where he adopted a policy of
non-alignment, loudly criticizing the United States and voicing support
for the People's Republic of China.Even till date Krishna Menon's speech
is the longest ever delivered in the Unites Nations Security
Council(UNSC).
On 23 January 1957 he delivered an unpresidented 8 hour
speech on defending india's stand on Kashmir. Krishna Menon became a
member of the Rajya Sabha in 1953. On February 3, 1956, he joined the
Union Cabinet as Minister without Portfolio. In 1957 he was elected to
the Lok Sabha from Bombay, and in April of that year he was named
minister of defence under Prime Minister Nehru. However, after India's
staggering defeat in the Sino-Indian War of 1962, he was removed from
office for the country's apparent lack of military preparedness. In 1967
he lost his parliamentary seat but was re-elected in 1969. He died on
October 6, 1974 in New Delhi. During his tenure as the High commissioner
to Britain, he was accused of being involved in a corruption scam
involving the purchase of used military jeeps from Britain to supply to
the Indian army during the war with Pakistan in 1948.